Brewing and understanding coffee
>> Sunday, October 12, 2014
AGGIE UPDATES
Art Tibaldo
SAGADA, Mountain
Province -- We are the baristas to our own coffee. With every sip of coffee we
drink, there are wealth of virtues and added values that define the beverage as
more than just a morning drink.
It was an experiential
learning to the participants of the Coffee 101 Cum Cross Visit that was held in
this tourist town at the onset of the cold months of 2014. The attendees came
from different parts of Luzon and Mindanao composed of small-to-medium
entrepreneurs, DTI speakers from nine regions and representatives from national
line agencies and local government units.
Director Myrna Pablo
of the Department of Trade and Industry-CAR said her agency is now implementing
“from seed to cup” that completes the menu of support for the region’s coffee
industry. “Demand becomes more challenging with today’s 3rd Wave
Coffee where people of wide age range prefer specialty coffee that carries with
them stories of the people and environment where the coffee originate” Pablo
added.
Prof. Valentino
Macanes of the Benguet State University who gave a talk on good agricultural
practices for coffee observed that the Philippines is blessed to have the four
commercial varieties, namely Arabica, Robusta, Excelsa and Liberica since the
country is within the coffee belt.
Macanes said there is
need to intensify the farmer’s productivity by helping them with appropriate
technology. Accordingly, RP ranks 110th in the world in terms of coffee
production and local producers cannot even meet domestic
consumption. Macanes also lamented “how we wish to bring back the old
glory of being among the top coffee producers” saying that RP was the world’s
fourth biggest exporter but it lasted in 1889 when coffee rust hit the country.
With the 3rd wave of
coffee generation through the proliferation of coffee shops and small coffee
roasters, Macanes expressed hope that with Arabica as the most preferred in
both local and global market, local growers and producers from the Cordillera
can make things happen. Besides, Arabica is considered medicinal and it is also
good for hang overs.
Hirofumi Yamamoto, a
Japanese coffee taster who is attending agro-forestry classes at BSU discussed
how coffee is selected worldwide through meticulous screening of seeds.
Yamamoto who has the distinction as a “cupper” or the practice of observing the
tastes and aromas of brewed coffee demonstrated how a brew is assessed through
slurping freshly ground and roasted coffee beans.
Gemma Ngelangel,
the owner of Gold Fish Café in Bontoc, Mountain Province hinted that every café
owner must know the business inside and out. “As manager, you also need to do
what your employee does and baristas should be marunong uminom ng kape” saying
that it is important for all in the coffee business to appreciate coffee by
heart. Ngelangel further said that coffee shops are places where people
socialize therefore, the owner must also know the beautiful places of their
locality making the establishment as a source of information. “Passion sells
and you have to make your brand memorable, original and easy to recall” the
lady entrepreneur further stated.
Maria Susana Edilo ,
a Tourism and Hospitality Industry Trainer and Consultant
and Level 1 Barista Certified by the Barista Guild of America
, who talked about specialty coffee trends and direction narrated how
coffee drinking originated in Ethiopia through an accidental discovery by a
goatherd who noticed the unusual behavior of his goats that nibbled on the
bright red berries of a certain bush. From varied uses that range from
medicinal to ceremonial drinks, coffee culture became global and it reached the
country in 1740 when it was first introduced by a Spanish Franciscan Monk.
Edilo explained that the roasting process produces the characteristics of the
coffee that even broken beans will affect the batch of coffee’s total taste
because it burns faster.
There is a new market
and emerging trend for gourmet coffee drinkers, Edilo revealed referring to the
3rdWave Coffee where customers and buyers are particular and
concerned with the cultivation, harvesting, processing and preparation methods
and practices.
The barista mentor
encouraged farmers to implement good agricultural practices and challenged
coffee shop owners to create a culture of social and environmental
responsibility by reducing plastics in their espresso packs and reuse ground
coffee for other uses.
During the coffee farm
tour and visit to local processors, Mayor James Edduba of Pasil town asked
about the hygienic aspect concerning the Alamid coffee referring to it as
animal manure. Simeon Sibayan of Bana’s Café replied saying that the
droppings of civet cat is thoroughly washed and manually cleaned as per
protocol set on the high value exotic drink. Sibayan explained that of a kilo
of fresh Alamid, only about 35% will be used by specialty shops and it is sold
in Manila for about P34K to P35 thousand pesos while he sells it at a far
lesser rate.
Sibayan opined that
Philippines can never compete with Brazil but we can add value to our products.
“Quality has to be imparted to our farmers so that they will also improve as
entrepreneurs and target the specialty coffee shop market” Sibayan concluded.
With the general understanding that coffee is gold from bean to cup, the fifty
something participants were convinced after the two-day training that indeed,
coffee is one industry that the Philippines can have a big break especially on
the Arabica variety.
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